Arizona Paper - Petrography of the Mount Morgan Mine, Queensland (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
W. E. Gaby
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
21
File Size:
2028 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1917

Abstract

SINce the time of their discovery, the genesis of the ores at Mount Morgan, and the nature of the changes which have affected the surrounding rocks, have been the subject of investigation and speculation by geologists and mining engineers. Developments at this mine, for a long period the greatest gold producer of the world, show that with depth the orebody grades into copper, of which metal it now furnishes a large output, exceeding in value the gold. In earlier times, the purity of the gold and the first extremely heterogeneous character of the ore made it an interesting problem. Now, the probable depth of the copper enrichment, genesis, and true relations of the neighboring rocks furnish equally profitable material for investigation, and the present somewhat detailed description of these ores and rocks, from microscopic study, may prove of interest. , The mine occupies a highly silicified portion of a belt of quartz-porphyry, which is believed to be the oldest rock of the region. This belt of quartz-porphyry and allied rocks runs north and south between two areas of a later intrusive granite, as shown on the geologic map,' Fig. 1. Near the orebody the quartz-porphyry has been intruded by a dense basaltic mass called the " Old Basic." Cutting all three of these igneous masses are two sets of basaltic dikes, one running northwest-southeast, and the other, cross dikes, northeast-southwest. These dikes may be contemporaneous with, instead of later than, the ore. Their number has caused peculiar difficulties in extracting it, as the clay selvage of decomposed material affords no adhesion between dike and ore, causing great blocks to loosen and come down. The investigation was based on specimens furnished by B. Magnus, former general manager of the mine, and notes on the areal geology by
Citation

APA: W. E. Gaby  (1917)  Arizona Paper - Petrography of the Mount Morgan Mine, Queensland (with Discussion)

MLA: W. E. Gaby Arizona Paper - Petrography of the Mount Morgan Mine, Queensland (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1917.

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